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Israeli military kills Palestinian militants

Israel's military killed three Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip today.

The deaths came a day after two men identified as the most senior al-Qaeda affiliates in the enclave died in an Israeli air strike as they rode a motorcycle

In southern Gaza, a Palestinian gunman was killed and another wounded near the border with Egypt's Sinai desert, hospital officials said.

The Israeli military said the two, also targeted while on a motorcycle, had been planning to fire rockets into Israel.

A second air strike in central Gaza killed two more Palestinian militants and wounded two others.

An Israeli military spokeswoman said the attack targeted a rocket launching squad.

Sources in the ultra-conservative Salafi Islamist movement said the two militants killed yesterday, Hisham al-Saedni and Ashraf al-Sabah, were leaders, respectively, of the Tawhid wa-Jihad and Ansar Al-Sunna groups.

The movements share al-Qaeda's vision of global jihad.

The men had recently merged their groups to form the umbrella Majles Shoura Al-Mujahideen (Holy Warriors' Guidance Council), the sources said, becoming the de facto heads of the diffuse Gaza jihadi network.

"Their blood will be a light to guide the holy warriors through the right path and will be fire that will burn the Jews," one of the sources told Reuters, saying reprisals would not be limited to the short-range rocket launches that are Gaza militants' favoured mode of attack on Israel.

The Salafi sources said Gaza-born Mr Saedni, 47, had lived in Egypt and Jordan and had fought for al-Qaeda in Iraq.

He had been wanted by Egypt on suspicion of involvement in attacks on tourist sites there.

Israel said the militant, who was arrested by Hamas in 2011 and freed last August, had been behind a string of rocket and bomb attacks against the country and had planned to carry out a militant operation on its Sinai border.

"The Global Jihad is stepping up its efforts to target us, and we will continue to interdict it with aggression and might, in terms of both response and pre-emption," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the Israeli cabinet in Jerusalem today.